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Leopardi screens at Venice Film Festival

Leopardi screens at Venice Film Festival

'Hungry Hearts' rounds out Italian trio of top prize contenders

Venice, 01 September 2014, 17:54

Redazione ANSA

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A keenly awaited biopic of beloved Italian poet Giacomo Leopardi, one of three Italian films contending for the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, was screened on Monday at the Lido. Rebellion and diversity are the modern keys to understanding Giacomo Leopardi, according to Mario Martone, director of Leopardi, whose Italian title 'Il Giovane Favoloso' (The Fabulous Young Man), is taken from a short story by Anna Maria Ortese and refers to the poet's precocity and prodigious learning at a young age.
    The film portrays the life of the 19th-century Italian poet and philosopher, played by Elio Germano. "You don't have to know Leopardi's work to follow the story of the journey of this man, a story of emancipation, escape, and breaking all the cages into which life itself forces us," Martone said.
    Martone said the film couldn't have been made without Germano, who embodies the role spending most of the film walking hunched over with a curved spine.
    "Being Giacomo was my dream," Germano said.
    Leopardi is one of two films about great Italian poets tipped as vying for the Golden Lion, the other being Abel Ferrara's Pasolini, in which Willem Defoe uncannily captures the visionary writer and filmmaker slain in murky circumstances on November 2, 1975. Another of the three Italian contenders for Venice's top prize, director Saverio Costanzo's Hungry Hearts, was warmly received by members of the international press on Monday after its screening on Sunday.
    The film, starring Adam Driver and Alba Rohrwacher, was called "a winning psychological drama" by UK'S The Telegraph, praised as "excellent" by The Independent, "absolutely surprising" by Radio France Internationale, and "splendidly acted, with strong and credible narration" by Reuters.
    "This film alone would be enough to make Adam Driver a star," said the BBC's Emma Jones.
    Hungry Hearts takes place in New York City, where a couple battles over their son's diet.
    In the film, the mother, played by Rohrwacher, insists on vegan fare, but the father, played by Driver, has to intervene when their son eventually becomes ill.
    Leopardi is scheduled for release in Italy in October 2014, while Hungry Hearts is slated for release in January 2015.
   

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